Dictionary of Basic Joseki, Volume I
By Yoshio Ishida
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Details show/hide
| Title | Dictionary of Basic Joseki, Volume I |
|---|---|
| Author | Yoshio Ishida |
| Translator | John Power |
| Publishers | Ishi Press, Kiseido |
| Codes | g21, K21 |
| Date | 1977, 1997 |
| ISBN | 4-906574-21-1 |
| Pages | 265 |
| Dimensions | 8 1/4. x 5 3/4. - 210mm x 147mm |
| Series Info | Dictionary of Basic Joseki. Volume I |
| Publishers's URL | http://kiseido.com/Dictionary.htm |
Blurb show/hide
This brilliant and original survey of joseki, written by a top Japanese professional, is not only a practical, well organized reference to help you chart your course through the myriad complications of standard joseki, but is also an illuminating analysis of their vital components such as tesuji and shape. It covers all important joseki and also deals with mistakes and alternatives in joseki. It is equally valuable as a reference work and as a primer in the fundamentals of go theory which underline joseki.
Contents show/hide
| Foreword | ix |
| Japanese Terms | xi |
| Contents of Volume II and Volume III | ...xii |
| Part One: The Small Knight Approach | ...2 |
| Part Two: The Large Knight Approach | ...232 |
| Part Three: The Two Space High Approach | ...246 |
Reviews show/hide
Review by Phil Waldron (AGA) show/hide 8/07/2005
| Review Author | Phil Waldron (AGA) | Reviewer Strength | 6d |
Whatever their playing strength, every go player has had the experience of being caught in an unknown joseki sequence and wondering whether the game would be over after the first corner. After the game, it is common practice to consult a joseki dictionary to avoid being caught again in the future. In the English-speaking world, Ishida Yoshio's Dictionary of Basic Joseki collection has served as the definitive joseki reference for almost thirty years. Often simply called "Ishida", this three-volume work surveys josekis arising from the most common corner openings, and covers all major variations known in the 1970s.
While no joseki dictionary can hope to cover all of the thousands of possible variations, the authors of this collection have done a superb job pruning away obscure sequences that are rarely played. This leaves enough space for a further analysis of mistakes and trick plays, as well as examples from actual games. Future development from the resulting positions is also discussed, although this is more the exception rather than the rule. The amount and level of analysis appears to be most suitable for players who have reached the single-digit kyu level. Beginners may find themselves, and a simpler reference such as Kiseido's "38 Basic Joseki" might be more useful.
While it was a complete reference when it was published, the Ishida collection is showing its age. Professional opinion about many variations has changed in the past thirty years, and new sequences are constantly being invented and refined. This is most obvious in the sections related to josekis resulting from pincers around the star-point, which is almost completely irrelevant by now. This is unfortunate considering how important these sequences are to modern go.
Whatever its drawbacks, all three volumes of the Dictionary of Basic Joseki are a must-have for all serious go players. They remain the most complete joseki collection available to Westerners and for that reason alone are worth having on the bookshelf.
Review by David Carlton show/hide
| Review Author | David Carlton | Reviewer Strength | 1 kyu |
| Author's Email | carlton@bactrian.org | website | http://www.bactrian.org/~carlton/ |
The only comprehensive reference for joseki in English. It doesn't include all of the latest variations (it's 20 years old), and it's not encyclopedic, but what's here is more than enough for everybody but the strongest of players. And it should be a part of everybody's go reference library, at least once you reach a certain level (dan-level? Any opinions?).
The first volume was out of print but has just been reprinted by Kiseido. Also, I see comments fairly frequently by strong players on rec.games.go that these books are woefully out of date, so that could be a problem if you're a very strong amateur who plays people who know the latest variations.
